Abstract
Links between employee commitment to their organizations and satisfaction with their jobs have been the subject of a large amount of empirical research, and still there seems little agreement about the causal connections between these two important employee attitudes. Understanding these attitudes is important because they have an important effect on organizational performance, and these attitudes can be influenced by human resource policies and practices. This paper assesses the gains from the use of a bivariate probit approach in measuring the connections between job satisfaction and organizational commitment. This paper is the first to make use of the bivariate probit approach in this context, and it improves our understanding of the connections between HR policy and these important employee attitudes. Our approach allows a direct test of the hypothesis that job satisfaction and organizational commitment are jointly determined by demographic and policy factors. The results are compared with the results from the more traditional binomial probit approach to illustrate the degree of bias corrected by the bivariate approach.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Raeespoor, A., Nejad, Z. E., Moradi, M., Moradpour, A., Barahmand, M., & Haidari, S. (2015). Survey in relationship between organizational commitment and job satisfaction. Advances in Environmental Biology, 9(2), 658–667.
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.